Thursday, November 11, 2010

High way to Heaven





"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle

than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." 

Matthew 19:24

The way to Heaven, Jesus seems to say, is by a completely mystical path.  Since it is entirely outside our 3D experience, we really have no idea what it is, where it is or actually how to get there.  Yet, the entire point of Jesus' ministry was to point us onto that path. He came to show us the way back to God. It is a mystical journey, not one paved with good deeds.  It is not earned nor achieved.  It is simply found by those who seek it.

While many others have come and gone offering wise and wonderful ways for us to return to God's realm of authentic presence and light, Jesus' teachings are very specific and yet it seems many of us don't understand what He was teaching us.  We try to fit His teaching into our materialistic worldview and when it doesn't seem to fit (which it doesn't) we cast it away or water it down, claiming it is obsolete.  We simply cannot see spiritually when our consciousness is focused outside and away from our inner mind.  We have trained ourselves to succeed in this outer world so well and so thoroughly that many are unable (even unwilling) to redirect their consciousness back into the silent stillness of their inner mind.

In the Gospel of Thomas, Jesus advises us to "be passersby," which means exactly what it sounds like.  The holy way calls for total detachment from all snares, dramas and objects of our world. We human beings are like laundry baskets full of dirty laundry, stained from all our busy living that it is next to impossible for us to see clearly in meditation or even live holy lives.  We project our "stuff" onto each other and swear that it's the other person's fault.  Taking responsibility for our own undealt with issues to which we are blind is the first step to cleaning our inner spiritual lens.  Jesus talks about that at great length in scriptures such as "take the log out of your own eye before trying to take it out of your neighbor's," and "let those who have not sinned cast the first stone (of judgment and punishment)."  These themes sparkle with profound wisdom and even modern psychological understanding throughout the gospels.

It seems the worst "sin" of all is that of materialism, the love of wealth.  It is idolatry.  There just isn't any sugar coating it.  You cannot worship God and money (materialism) because the love of money does not want to worship God.  It wants to worship itself.  Our world has been in denial of this fundamental truth.  Greed, selfishness and an impossibly strong attachment to having more and more has locked and chained a rich person to this passing dimension that he is not able to relinquish that attachment, or the myriad of other controlling pride issues that usually goes along with it. 

When materialism becomes your god, then you have bowed down to the golden calf and worshipped matter over spirit.  When God is not at the center of your heart, you are truly powerless and  truly poor.  In the spiritual blindness of that poverty, so many of us seek false idols, like drugs, to fill the empty heart, which can only be filled and fueled by God's power. 

Heaven is a spiritual dimension outside the cosmos, which Stephen Hawking will never find with any telescope. Yet we can find it. We are able to enter it through our spiritual selves in prayer or meditation when we have dropped all our material obsessions. We can only enter when in all sincerity we have set our will to honestly put God first, and when we are genuine in our desire to enter the spiritual path.  By switching our internal channel from materialism, greed, elitism, and even controlling power, and then surrendering to the holy way, we begin to cooperate with God's grace which is always magnetically drawing us deeper into our inner being where we can and will find the way.

I have often thought that beautiful first Christmas in which Christ was born in a humble manger on a cold starlit night was also symbolic of this holy way.  When in the deep, dark manger of our hearts, Christ is born, we have experienced the most beautiful miracle of our lives. When you have let Him in, He will change our tears into light beams of unsurpassing bliss.  He is the king of the way that leads us out of this dark world, as contrasted in the Gospel of Luke, with Herod, Israel's "king" who lead deeper into the lie and illusion.  God's way turns our world upside down.  The less attachment you have to material stuff, the more you are freed up to enter into the unknown, where truth is found.

Lately, as I've heard Christmas advertisements already announcing the upcoming big shopping season, I've heard in my heart the scripture from Matthew 21 in which Jesus tosses the moneychangers out of the temple, adamantly condemning them for making His Father's House a den of thieves. If the Christ light, the presence of God can only be met within the human heart, then the heart is the temple.  It seems clear that Jesus is furious with those who have turned their inner consciousness away from God and are drunk with money and false power. As Christmas is the celebration of both the birth of Christ in a real historical way as well as a mirror of the spiritual birth of Christ into the human heart, it seems our crazed Christmas shopping is like those money changers.  Lately,  I'm increasingly choked up that people would think they could celebrate and honor such a sacred and holy event with any form of materialism.

Rather than worship the god of materialism in the name of Jesus, perhaps we should all go out on Christmas Eve and look up at the stars and hold each other and allow that love to enfold us and fill our hearts with the light of heaven.  That love cannot be bought and sadly any materialism only takes the focus away from the truth.  It's hard enough to be passersby in this highly materialistic world, but to distort the meaning of the birth of Christ even further away from the truth is truly heart breaking.





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